I like this, its quiet refreshing. A driver or two on the grid could learn from this.
That sounds very made up for a couple of reasons:zibby43 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2018, 23:26
Also, I read an interesting *rumor* from someone that has a friend at Brixworth. Mercedes had a novel way of burning oil when the '18 season kicked off in Melbourne (supposedly it involved the piston heads). The FIA quietly asked Mercedes to ditch the design after Melbourne.
Ferrari found a way to continue burning oil over the course of the season, whereas Merc could not.
I thought you were allowed to break the engine seals with someone from the FIA present. So thats not a problem at allMudflap wrote: ↑06 Dec 2018, 01:09That sounds very made up for a couple of reasons:zibby43 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2018, 23:26
Also, I read an interesting *rumor* from someone that has a friend at Brixworth. Mercedes had a novel way of burning oil when the '18 season kicked off in Melbourne (supposedly it involved the piston heads). The FIA quietly asked Mercedes to ditch the design after Melbourne.
Ferrari found a way to continue burning oil over the course of the season, whereas Merc could not.
- All teams are allowed to burn the oil however they want provided they respect the imposed consumption limit.
- If there was such a device in the pistons it would have been impossible to just remove without breaking the engine FIA seals.
Hoping I will find out next week. Got invited to an HPE event at Merc HQ which includes a factory tour!
Hm...at 39:14 he says the WT is running 24/7 ... quite hard to believe, considering the regulations.zibby43 wrote: ↑05 Dec 2018, 23:26Toto discussing how Mercedes has increased its downforce targets for the 2019 car. Toto also hints at a new design with respect to the 2019 PU.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q95f4iG ... .be&t=2238
Also, I read an interesting *rumor* from someone that has a friend at Brixworth. Mercedes had a novel way of burning oil when the '18 season kicked off in Melbourne (supposedly it involved the piston heads). The FIA quietly asked Mercedes to ditch the design after Melbourne.
Ferrari found a way to continue burning oil over the course of the season, whereas Merc could not.